OK so 2010 was my first burn, and I really enjoyed the metropolis theme (partly cause I'm from NYC). What I liked was that it had a unifying visual quality. People could make their own art but people did a lot with cities/buildings/etc that looked really cool. How are people going to symbolize/visualize rites of passage??

"Today, it has entered the common vernacular to describe anyone doing something "the hard way" for the first time, particularly if training is necessarily insufficient to fully prepare one for the experience."

Much to Simon's chagrin, we are going with a right of passage to become a certified "Card Carrying Cocksucker" with our three well-endowed male and one female mannequins issuing libations and refreshment via their genitalia. Each person who "services" all of them, the rite of passage, will receive an actual certification of Cocksucker.

Trishntek wrote:Much to Simon's chagrin, we are going with a right of passage to become a certified "Card Carrying Cocksucker" with our three well-endowed male and one female mannequins issuing libations and refreshment via their genitalia. Each person who "services" all of them, the rite of passage, will receive an actual certification of Cocksucker.

Could the straight men & gay women get an alternate certificate for being a cunning linguist?

I'm visualizing the theme with a catapillar's transformation into a butterfly... I think that's a pretty straightforward visualization of a rite of passage, especially from childhood into adulthood. I call it "Chrysalis."

Trishntek wrote:Much to Simon's chagrin, we are going with a right of passage to become a certified "Card Carrying Cocksucker" with our three well-endowed male and one female mannequins issuing libations and refreshment via their genitalia. Each person who "services" all of them, the rite of passage, will receive an actual certification of Cocksucker.

Could the straight men & gay women get an alternate certificate for being a cunning linguist?

[quote="Raven9940"]OK so 2010 was my first burn, and I really enjoyed the metropolis theme (partly cause I'm from NYC). What I liked was that it had a unifying visual quality. People could make their own art but people did a lot with cities/buildings/etc that looked really cool. How are people going to symbolize/visualize rites of passage??[/quote]